1.
Ten Days
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Ten Days is a pop song by Australian singer-songwriter Missy Higgins, and the second single from her debut album The Sound of White. The single was released in Australia on 15 November 2004 and peaked at No.12 on the ARIA singles chart and it was written by Higgins and Jay Clifford of Jump, Little Children. By the end of 2004 it had been certified Gold selling over 35,000 copies and it was also voted the No.6 song in the Triple J Hottest 100,2004. The video features Higgins travelling to places and many of the shots were filmed in Adelaide. Higgins signed a contract with Eleven while still at high school. After she left school she spent much of 2002 on a trip to Europe. When she returned she began writing music for her debut album, the lyrics for Ten Days were inspired by Higgins breakup with her boyfriend when she travelled to Europe. The song was written by Higgins and Jay Clifford, the guitarist and lead singer of US band Jump, Ten Days was released on 15 November 2004. It entered the ARIA Singles Chart at No.14 and later rose to No.12 and it stayed on the chart for 20 weeks and was certified Gold. It spent five weeks on the Recording Industry Association of New Zealand Singles Chart, the song was released in the United Kingdom on 30 May 2005, her first single to be released there, and reached No.133 on the UK Singles Chart. In 2005, the song was nominated for an Australasian Performing Right Association song writing award for Song of the Year but was beaten by her own debut single, the music video for Ten Days features footage of Higgins travelling through Europe. CD single Ten Days Greed For Your Love Scar The Special Two 2005 APRA Awards, Song Of The Year Official website Lyrics of this song at MetroLyrics

2.
Ten Days' Campaign
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The Ten Days Campaign was a failed military expedition by the United Kingdom of the Netherlands against the secessionist Kingdom of Belgium between 2 and 12 August 1831. The campaign was an attempt by the Dutch King William I to halt the course of the Belgian Revolution which had broken out in August 1830. The Dutch army invaded Belgium on 2 August 1831 and defeated Belgian forces in battles over the course of the next few days. On 8 August, the Belgian government appealed to France for military support, the French agreed to send reinforcements to assist the Belgians under Marshal Étienne Gérard. Rather than fight the French, the Dutch withdrew from Belgium without achieving their objectives, in November 1832, the French besieged and captured Antwerp, the last Dutch stronghold in Belgium, effectively ending the military confrontation between the Dutch and Belgians. In the aftermath of the Napoleonic Wars, the 1815 Congress of Vienna merged the former Austrian Netherlands with the Dutch Republic to create the United Kingdom of the Netherlands. After 15 years of misrule and growing opposition, the provinces of the Kingdom rebelled in August 1830. In the aftermath of the revolution, large numbers of Belgian soldiers deserted from the Dutch army, most of the armys officers were Dutch but the bulk of the conscripted recruits came from the Belgian south. About two-thirds of the troops stationed in the Southern Netherlands deserted, much of the Dutch armys strength was also deployed overseas in the Dutch colonial empire. Consequently, there were few armed confrontations between Belgian rebels and the Dutch army during the revolution itself. However, the leaders of the Belgian revolution had grown overconfident because of their success and had not taken steps to build up a military force of their own. King William I viewed the failure to suppress the Belgian revolt as a humiliation, therefore, when William learned that the rebels had asked Leopold of Saxe-Coburg to be their king, he began to prepare his invasion. In 1831, a 50, 000-strong Dutch force was built up in Brabant along the Belgian border and it was commanded by the Prince of Orange. The Belgian army across the border numbered just 24,000, the Belgian force was split into two armies, known as the Army of the Meuse and the Army of the Scheldt, under the nominal command of King Leopold I and his Minister of War Amédée de Failly. On the morning of 2 August 1831, just days after Leopolds coronation, Belgian scouts noticed the advance, and a number of roads were blocked with felled trees. The first skirmishes took place around Nieuwenkerk, the Dutch supreme commander, the Prince of Orange, arrived in the afternoon to support his troops and, at the same time, Zondereigen was taken by the Dutch, with some 400 Belgians repulsed. Near Ravels, the Belgian army was driven into the surrounding forests by the Dutch. The Belgians later retreated to Turnhout, allowing the Dutch to set up camp, the sound of the Dutch artillery alarmed the population of Turnhout, who fled en masse towards Antwerp

3.
Ten-Day War
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The Ten-Day War or the Slovenian Independence War, also the Weekend War was a brief war of independence that followed the Slovenian declaration of independence on 25 June 1991. It was fought between the Slovenian Territorial Defence and the Yugoslav Peoples Army and it lasted from 27 June 1991 until 7 July 1991, when the Brioni Accords were signed. It marked the beginning of the Yugoslav Wars, following the death of Yugoslav president Josip Broz Tito in 1980, underlying political, ethnic, religious, and economic tensions within Yugoslavia surfaced. A series of disagreements among delegates persisted until four of the six republics each made the decision to secede from Yugoslavia, supported by Germany and the Vatican, Slovenia was among those republics aiming for independence. In April 1990, Slovenia held its first democratic multi-party elections, on 23 December 1990, Slovenia held a referendum, which passed with 88. 5% of overall electorate supporting independence, with a turnout of 93. 3%. The Slovenian government was aware that the federal government in Belgrade might seek to use military force to quash Slovenias move towards independence. Immediately after the Slovenian elections, the Yugoslav Peoples Army announced a new doctrine that would apply across the country. The Tito-era doctrine of General Peoples Defence, in each republic maintained a Territorial Defence Force, was to be replaced by a centrally directed system of defence. The republics would lose their role in matters, and their TOs would be disarmed and subordinated to YPA headquarters in Belgrade. The Slovenian government resisted these moves, and successfully ensured that the majority of Slovenian Territorial Defence equipment was out of the hands of the YPA. It also declared in an amendment passed on 28 September 1990 that its TO would be under the sole command of the Slovenian government. At the same time, the Slovenian government set up a secret alternative command structure and this was an existing but antiquated institution, unique to Slovenia, which was intended to enable the republic to form an ad hoc defence structure, akin to a Home Guard. It was of importance prior to 1990, with antiquated weapons. However, the DEMOS-led government realised that the MSNZ could be adapted to provide an organisation to the TO that would be entirely in the hands of the Slovenian government. When the YPA tried to control of the Slovenian Territorial Defence. The Slovenes were aware that they would not be able to deter the YPA forces for a period of time. Under Defence Minister Janez Janša, they adopted a strategy based on an asymmetric warfare approach, TO units would carry out a guerrilla campaign, using anti-tank weapons and anti-aircraft missiles to ambush YPA units. Hit-and-run and delaying tactics were to be preferred and frontal clashes were to be avoided since in such situations the YPAs superior firepower would have been difficult to overcome